“The investigation must begin with the facts of your granddaughter’s disappearance. You have expressed a reluctance to raise the alarm or to involve the authorities. Please tell me why.”
“There is no need. I recently gave instructions that Gaia Laelia is never to go out alone.” After she came to see me, presumably. “The door porter would have stopped her-had she tried.” I already knew that the door porter still cheerfully left his station unattended.
“You first noticed her missing yesterday?”
“Ask her mother these details.”
“Very well.” I refused to be thrown. “My sister is acquainted with Caecilia Paeta.” I remembered not to land Caecilia in trouble by admitting that I had met her when she came secretly to Maia’s house. “ I understand her to be sensible.” Numentinus looked annoyed at me for commenting. His eyes narrowed; like most people he encountered, I felt that his daughter-in-law aroused mild contempt in him. I was glad I had spoken. I wanted him to know I would evaluate witnesses on my terms. “Let us consider more general issues. The vigiles have been asked to search the city in case Gaia has been abducted. It is a complex task, but they will do as decent a job as they can.” I was telling him it would be near impossible to find her, unless the cohorts had some clues. “My own search starts here. If the child is deliberately hiding, or if she has run away, what would make her do that? Was she unhappy, sir?”
“She had no reason to be.”
“Her parents live apart. Did their separation distress her?”
“At first.” I was surprised he answered, but I suppose he had already realized this would be asked. “My son left home three years ago. Gaia Laelia was an infant. She has accepted the situation.” More readily than the old man himself, probably.
“A parental separation might cause arguments that could have frightened her? But later she must have realized she remained in a secure and loving home.” Numentinus looked suspicious, as though he thought I was being ironic. “Are you willing to answer questions about why your son, Laelius Scaurus, left?”
“No. Keep to the subject.” After that, I did not dare ask about the possibility of Gaia’s parents divorcing, let alone the relationship between Scaurus and his aunt. I would have to tackle that with somebody, though. Somebody else.
“So Gaia settled down, still living here with her mother, and three years later her name has gone into the Vestals’ lottery. I understand you are opposed to that?”
“My opinion is immaterial.”
“Excuse me. I simply wondered if there had been anger in the family home which might have caused a bad response in a sensitive child.” He made no answer. That chin came up again, warning me I strayed too far into an unwelcome area. “Very well. Gaia Laelia’s own reaction to her proposal as a Vestal is relevant, you will concede. A motive for her disappearance might be that she hates the prospect and fled to avoid it. Yet I am told by all sources that she was delighted. This, sir, is why I am inclined to believe that her disappearance is some childish accident.”
“She is a careful child,” he disagreed. No children are careful.
“And intelligent,” I said. There was no flicker of grandfatherly pride. If I had been discussing Julia Junilla at home, either Pa or the senator would have been orating in full flood immediately. “I met her, as you know. Which brings me unavoidably to this question: Why would your granddaughter seek out an informer and announce that her family was trying to kill her?”
The old man was ready, and full of contempt. “Since it was untrue, I can offer no reason for her claim.”
I kept my voice quiet. “Did you punish her when you found out?”
He hated having to answer. He knew if he did not tell me, the servants would. “It was explained to her that she had erred.”
“Was she beaten?” I made the suggestion neutrally.
“No.” His lip curled as if disdaining the thought. I wondered. Still, Vestals have to be perfect in every limb. Her mother, wanting Gaia to remain eligible, would have protested against a beating, even if she dared not argue about much else.
“Was she confined to her room?”
“Briefly. She should not have left the house without permission.”
“When she left the house, where was her nurse?”
“Gaia had locked her in a pantry.”
Numentinus had expressed no emotion, but I let him see me smile slightly at Gaia’s spirit and initiative before I continued in the same neutral tone as before: “Was the same pantry used as a cell when Gaia disappeared yesterday?”
“No.”
“Who can best tell me what happened then?”
“Discuss it with my daughter-in-law.”
“Thank you.” I had finished with him. I might as well not have started. He knew that. He looked very pleased with himself. “I shall just check your room, if I may, then you need not be disturbed here again.” I scanned everywhere quickly. Flat walls; no curtained arches; only small items of furniture-apart from one chest. “May I look in the chest, please?”
Numentinus breathed; well, he seethed with annoyance. “It is not locked.”